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Whole-Brained Grandparenting: The Baby Gift




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Expecting your first grandchild? I remember when I received the

phone call that my firstborn was expecting his first. My head

and my heart were full. I remembered back when we had placed

that phone calls to our parents. I had expected hoots and

hollers on the phone, and instead there was a long silence. Now

I know what was going through their minds! We lived miles from

family and existed on my paltry earnings while my husband was in

med-school, and they were worried.



It has been said that procreation best belongs to the young and

impulsive because after a certain age, youd never have the

nerve to have children.



When you have children, my mother told me, you become a

hostage to fortune. She may have misquoted, in a way fitting to

her caring personality. Ive also heard, When you have

children, you give hostages to fortune. We who have parented

long enough to have a child able to produce a child know all

about this. As the sign in my local plant nursery so succinctly

puts it: There is no guarantee on the life of this plant, or of

any other life on this planet.



Our hearts and minds are full because the job of parenting

doesnt end when they leave home. It must become more subtle as

we allow our adult children to make their own decisions, but our

influence remains and there are information and wisdom to

impart. Thus the call for whole-brained grandparenting.



For instance, your adult child may read the same financial

advice article for new parents that I read, which contained the

following: At a glance the question of whether one spouse

should quit work [and stay home] is clear cut: If the spouse

earns only enough to cover child care costs, staying at home

probably makes sense. Looking further yielded only that

benefits were often 35% of the salary package.



Like the mythological Cerberus, who guarded the gates to the

Underworld (metaphorically, the things just below the level of

cognition), I have three heads, and all 3 were wagging: (1) the

heart that feels a baby benefits most when cared for by its

parent; (2) the head that thinks the article-writer was

irresponsible not to point out this wasnt a decision to make

strictly on the basis of finances; and, (3) the whole-brained EQ

coach who believes important decisions require EQ as well as IQ.



So what gifts will you give the new baby? As a grandparent, our

parenting modeling continues. Our choice of gifts will say a

lot.



Do you rush out and buy the $300 stuffed duckie or take care of

half their Wish List at Toys R Us? Or do you symbolically get

the show on the road for Responsible Parenting? The birth of the

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first child signals a huge transition taking on the emotional

and financial responsibility for a new life. You want to

oversee, in a respectful and hands-off fashion, that all the

bases get touched.



Financially, here are some topics you might bring up:



1.A parent must have a will, unless you want the Court

deciding who raises your child (the Guardian), and who

administers the finances (the Executor). They need not, and

often should not, be the same person. 2.Insurance. Some rules

of thumb: a.You insure the life of someone according to their

ability to provide income. This doesnt include babies. b.An

adult in their 20s, 30s, and 40s is statistically far more

likely to need disability insurance than life insurance. c.

Group insurance plans through jobs arent portable. Individual

policies are. 3.College education. 529s are great you can use

any states plan and the beneficiary can attend school in any

state but college is gravy. Like they say on the airplane --

apply your own oxygen mask first; then your childs. An 18 year

old can, if necessary, provide her own college funding. The

higher priority for the parents (and the future benefit of their

children) is to provide for their own retirement. 4.Uniform

Gifts to Minors. Do they (or you) want to establish a savings

account in the childs name? As a grandparent, I doubt you do

it reverts to the childs sole discretion at age 18 or 21, and

you know this is putting a weapon in the hands of a child, but

your grown children may not. Best-case scenario, your 18 year

old grandson argues with his parents about whether to spend the

$200,000 on college or living for a year in Tahiti with his

girl-friend. Worst-case scenario, he just does it; its his

money. 5.The $600 matching crib set. Can the baby exist without

it? I imagine yours did!



Giving the gift of sitting down and going over the realities is

not very glamorous, but then neither is changing diapers. Your

daughter may have her head in the clouds, and her husband, his

feet on the ground, or vice versa; or both may be in either

position together. You, on the other hand, can see and share the

big picture.



What if you gave them a giant stuffed duckie and tied around its

neck some gift coupons -- a paid visit to your trusted lawyer;

tuition to a parenting seminar; a years supply of maid or lawn

service; and a 3-night cruise during the first year with you

babysitting back home. Scaled to your income, of course.



My grandmother was very loving, very practical, and also very

wealthy. Her gift to me when my son was born consisted of some

exquisite designer layette items; a years diaper service; and a

not with a little P.S. that she knew my husband was looking

after the will and that sort of thing. She could have given a

lot more financially, but she exercised restraint, modeling

whats really important. Most meaningful to me was the note

inside. She was born in 1898, and the note began, Welcome to

the sacred sorority of motherhood. Somehow that needed to be

said.



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And over the years, she had given me much excellent advice,

including Dont listen to those pediatricians, listen to your

heart. As an example, she told me that her pediatrician had

told her to let the baby cry. I didnt listen to him, she

said. Babies cry for a reason.



Dont proselytize about what you dont give, and dont apologize

for what you cant give. My other grandmother, whose life was

rich in love and Spartan in possessions, handed me a wedding

gift of rags for cleaning, obtained the way rags used to be

from scraps of her worn out clothing and linens. I placed it

next to the sterling silver service for 12 from the other

grandmother on the gift table, and valued them both about the

same.



Whatever you give materially or in-service, be there to help

them sort through the fad-du-jour advice, get in touch with

their own values and priorities, and touch all the bases.



And, by the way, congratulations!



About the author:

Susan Dunn, MA, The EQ Coach, http://www.susandunn.cc . Susan

is the author of Restitution: A Womans Job at Midlife,

available on her website, and offers coaching, Internet courses

and ebooks around emotional intelligence for your personal and

professional development. Retirement, midlife, and transitional

coaching. Get certified as an EQ coach, the perfect retirement

career. Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for information.



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